11 posts from November 15, 2012

November 15, 2012

Many of the problems that surfaced during the 2012 election were
predicted by Democratic legislators who tried to soften the impact of a controversial voting law with a slew of pro-voter amendments.

All the amendments to HB 1355 failed in the Republican-dominated House
and Senate, though some of the same lawmakers who voted against the reforms now
appear to be supporting election reform.

“It’s a little early to say what led to what led to those long lines,” said incoming
House Speaker Will Weatherford,
R-Wesley Chapel, adding that a committee needs to look at why Florida’s election was plagued by 6-hour
lines and a last-in-the-nation presidential result.

Language from the Democrats’ amendments would have expanded
the number of early voting sites, limited the length of constitutional
amendments and given local election supervisors the option to extend early
voting hours on their own if they felt it necessary.

Sec. of State Ken
Detzner, Florida’s
chief elections official, has said that the length of the ballot and the lack
of sufficient early voting sites is what caused the chaos on Election Day.

Amendments and legislation that would have dealt
specifically with those issues were rejected by Republican lawmakers, including
some in South Florida districts that had lines
of up to 9 hours.

One failed amendment would have mandated that local elections
supervisors do everything in their power to ensure that no voter waited more
than 25 minutes in line.

One after the other, the amendments failed. Now, lawmakers
and Gov. Rick Scott, who signed HB
1355, are trying to figure out what went so terribly wrong during Florida’s
nationally-televised voting debacle.

Here are a few Democrat-backed amendments to HB 1355 that
now seem prescient, 18 months after they were offered, and killed, on the floor
of the House and Senate.